I shoot for the local paper at 3 different High Schools in town. At the one school, the lights constantly change.
If I shoot a burst, each frame is different. The other two schools are just fine.
Any help on whether I can correct this would be appreciated.
One night I tried, RAW, even picked a white balance, and couldn't make it better.
I even shot manual with auto ISO.
Everyone sees the same problem with their photos.
I thought I read something on FM about indoor basketball lighting, with trying different shutter speeds for cycling lights but couldn't find those posts when searching.
The exposures show the same settings, i.e. F stop and shutter speed, yet look different.
I thought maybe of asking the school to show me their spare bulbs to see if maybe they could change styles.
Thanks for any replies, Ken.

That problem is almost universal in the world of high school football. I don't think you'll get a welcome reception if you ask them to change the lights for photos. Most people don't value photos like photographers do. I usually shoot a short burst, pick the best one to work with and hope the peak action shot is not the worst one. My photos go sometimes for print in the paper (depending upon the game) and always on the website for the kids to see, steal for facebook and sometimes order reprints. I'm not too worried about the color shifts, since Sports Illustrated is not looking at these. I can get them close enough.
I did shoot an ESPN broadcast high school game two weeks ago. They brought their own supplemental lighting towers which were like NCAA D1 quality lighting and the photos turned out great. Thanks ESPN.

The problem is that HS Stadium and many HS gyms use lights that cycle through a range of color temperatures when they are on. They do not have a constant output and thus the variation from shot to shot. Depending on where the lights overlap and how wide you are shooting it is possible to have different color shifts from one end to the other of the same picture. I haven't seen any functional fixes for this in the field.

The only thing I have seen mentioned about cycling lights and shutter speed was that if you used a SS of 1/60 or slower the shutter would be open for an entire cycle and thus a constant overall. Unfortunately 1/60 or slower doesn't help much for sports.

In short... there is NOTHING that can be done. You just have to deal with it and hope that at the very least, the entire frame shows the color cast. Often times, since the banks cycle differently, you'll get one side of the frame red, and the other side of the frame... blue. That's a bear.

ELWOOD B wrote:
That problem is almost universal in the world of high school football.
Closer to to universal in the world of high school sports in general. Not to mention, some small colleges, etc.

ELWOOD B wrote:
I did shoot an ESPN broadcast high school game two weeks ago. They brought their own supplemental lighting towers which were like NCAA D1 quality lighting and the photos turned out great. Thanks ESPN.
Could be the first time ESPN ever helped a sports photographer.

As has already been said not much you can do about it, just learn to live with and make the best out of a bad situation

Could be the first time ESPN ever helped a sports photographer.
I have shot a few HS games that ESPN has covered and they bring in big rigs with an enormous amount of light, believe me its not for the photographer.